RI 6331 Willett Range Coal Deposits, Mackay Glacier Area, Victoria Land, Antarctica

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
John J. Mulligan
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
76
File Size:
5759 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1963

Abstract

Coalbeds were discovered in outcroppings of the Beacon group of sediments on the north end of the Willett Range ( altitude 77 ° 11 ' S , longitude 160 ° 20 ' E ) , Victoria Land , Antarctica , in December 1960 during an investigation undertaken as part of the U.S. Antarctic Research Program under the auspices of the National Science Foundation . Three separate exposures of coal or coaly material were found . Two of the exposures contain , respectively , eight and four beds of hard , compact , finely banded attrital coal ranging in thickness from 8 feet downward to a few inches , and reported to range in rank from mediumvolatile bituminous to semianthracite . The coals are associated with carbonaceous shales containing an abundant assemblage of fossil plants resembling those associated with the Permian coals of Australia and other Gondwana areas . The third exposure , apparently somewhat higher in the stratigraphic sequence , contains only coaly plant fragments scattered through a thin conglomerate and overlying sandstones . A sandstone bed that overlies these coal - bearing sandstones contains abundant logs and fragments of silicified wood . Preservation of features is poor , but one segment of a silicified stem suggests comparison with Rhexoxylon , a gymnospermous tree that usually is considered indicative of Triassic age . The Beacon sediments in this area have been invaded , broken , and uplifted by a massive series of diabase sills and dikes greater in volume than the intruded sediments . The heat emitted by these intrusives must have advanced the metamorphic development of the coals . However , there is no evidence of alteration to graphite , and coal found in direct contact with a diabase sill contains no vesicles or other usual evidences of natural coking . Either the pressure of overlying rocks inhibited the development of coke , or the coals had been metamorphosed beyond the coke forming stage before the igneous intrusion .
Citation

APA: John J. Mulligan  (1963)  RI 6331 Willett Range Coal Deposits, Mackay Glacier Area, Victoria Land, Antarctica

MLA: John J. Mulligan RI 6331 Willett Range Coal Deposits, Mackay Glacier Area, Victoria Land, Antarctica. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1963.

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